More interesting discussions this week on LOOW site

by jmaloni

Fri, May 11th 2012 05:10 pm

by Terry Duffy

Two separate meetings - both featuring more involved
discussion on the Interim Waste Containment
Structure at Lake Ontario Ordnance Works site - took place this week by local citizens
groups focused on LOOW and its future.

Monday, the LOOW Community Action Council met on the
Lewiston-Porter campus to review details on the in-progress "Applicable or
Relevant and Appropriate Requirements" - technical documents being prepared by
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Buffalo District. The ARARs are the latest in
a series of memorandums being prepared by the Corps as part of its months-long feasibility
study on the IWCS at LOOW and its future. And they're among the most complex
thus far.

Corps reps John Busse, LOOW site project manager, and Jane
Staten, project engineer for the Niagara Falls Storage Site, explained the
ARARs, described as "evaluations," deal with threshold requirements, namely
legal definitions of federal regulations that would trigger a remedial action at
the site. Corps "lawyers weigh in heavily on the process," said Busse.

"It's a complex stew of regulations, absolute, legal
interpretations," added Corps-retained facilitator Doug Sarno, who is working
with CAC in steering Corps information on the IWCS study to the community.

Sarno said with ARARs a number of interests have roles, but
when it's all said and done, Corps lawyers have the final say-so on any future
actions triggering a government cleanup of a site. "Public input is important;
the EPA had a role, the state DEC has a role, but only as advisory roles as
does the community," said Sarno.

He said the Corps in its determinations takes comments from
all interests into consideration. "But the Corps has the final say on IWCS, as
does its lawyers," unlike the government cleanup on Fernald, Ohio, which saw
the involvement of the EPA.

Staten provided what she called a simple example of an ARAR
contained in federal regulations under Title 40: Protection of Environment (under
§61.190 Designation of Facilities). She noted the inclusion of the Niagara
Falls Storage Site in a grouping of five facilities nationwide designated as
"storage and disposal facilities for radium containing material ... owed and
operated by the Department of Energy that emit radon-222 into the air."

Then she provided a more complex one under the §61.190
Standard, which places limits on radon releases at a site and triggers mandated
government response. She noted the Standard contains criteria stating "No
source at a Department of Energy facility shall emit more than 20 picocuries
per square meter per second of radon-222 as an average for the entire source
into the air."

"This defines what cannot be exceeded; it's a current
standard applied to all NFSS testing," said Staten, adding its "a requirement
to demonstrate the regulation standard." She added that gray areas arise when
the ARAR "involves the applying of standards that get to be proven."

"Options would need to be considered, standards need to be
applied, the ARARs need to be evaluated, applied," said Staten. "In all the
Corps has to prove it can meet the ARAR standards" to trigger response.

Busse said the Corps in its IWCS review would be considering
the possible evaluation of up to eight ARARs as part of its study on the IWCS
that could trigger a government response. "Four are complex," he added.

Both Busse and Staten closed by saying they were uncertain
at this point as to when the Corps ARAR evaluations for the IWCS feasibility
study would be completed and ready for release to the community as technical
documents in preparation for a planned Corps workshop this summer.

Tuesday, the second group, the LOOW Restoration Advisory
Board, held a low-key session at Lew-Port that featured an informative
presentation on the science of radiation by Dr. Mark Gallo, associate professor
of biology at Niagara University. Gallo explained the differences and impacts of
alpha, beta and gamma rays emissions - their breakdowns, longevity and ultimate
impacts on the human body. He told the handful of visitors that gamma
emissions, described as "high energy" release, are considered by far the most
dangerous and most prevalent in the IWCS cell. "These are the most wide-ranging
at LOOW," said Gallo.

He added that soil consistencies also need to be considered
at LOOW when determining the solubility of the radioactive agents. Among the
issues of concern he said would be pumping operations at site that could impact
the area's hydrology.

Chemist Ann Roberts, formerly of Youngstown, participated in
the session via conference call from Wisconsin. She told RAB attendees she had
done additional reviews of IWCS leakages and determined that nearby activity,
namely pumping operations at Modern, could be influencing the flow of
contaminants at the IWCS. "There are increases in radium in well OW 11B" found
on the eastern side of the IWCS that "suggest that Modern pumping operations
prompted changes in groundwater in an easterly direction." said Roberts.

She said the Corps in its responses thus far does "suggest
acknowledgement" that a sanitary sewer was damaged from past construction at
IWCS in the 1980, but "pumping activities have yet to be factored in."

Roberts also chided the Corps for its delays in sharing
information regarding future cleanup work at the Lewiston wastewater treatment
plant on the northwest side of the IWCS cell. The Corps "has not shared
remedial investigation material ... they have kept the sampling secret, they have
not shared it with the community," said Roberts.